Itinerary
Mar 10, 2026

Judicial Oversight: Goldman Confronts Bondi Over "Selective Privilege" in Epstein Files

WASHINGTON, D.C. — In a volatile session in Room 2141 of the House Judiciary Committee on March 20, 2026, the legislative oversight of the "Epstein Files" reached a breaking point. Representative Dan Goldman (D-NY), a former federal prosecutor, challenged the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) legal basis for withholding 147 pages of documents, alleging that "privilege" is being weaponized to protect perpetrators while exposing survivors. 🏛️

1. The Privilege Paradox and the 86-Page Memo

The confrontation centered on an 86-page prosecution memorandum from the Southern District of New York, which remains heavily redacted despite the bipartisan Epstein Files Transparency Act. ⚖️

  • The Five-Fold Invocation: During a 90-second exchange, AG Bondi invoked "privilege" five times to deflect questions regarding the memo's contents. 🛡️

  • Technicalities vs. Transparency: Legal analysts noted that the DOJ’s reliance on these technicalities suggests an attempt to bypass the transparency requirements established by the 2025 legislation. 📉

2. The "Victim List" Inconsistency

House Oversight chair subpoenas Attorney General Pam Bondi for deposition  in Epstein probe | CNN Politics

A startling revelation during the hearing involved a DOJ document titled "Epstein Victim List," which Goldman held aloft to demonstrate a "startling inconsistency" in redaction protocols. 🏛️

  1. 31 of 32 Exposed: Of the 32 names on the list, 31 survivors were left unredacted, effectively exposing their identities to the public record. ⚖️

  2. The Sole Redaction: Goldman alleged that the only name carefully blacked out was not a victim, but a perpetrator. 🛡️

  3. The "Clerical Error" Defense: AG Bondi characterized the exposure as "unintentional," a claim Goldman met with skepticism, noting that the ability to redact a single specific name among 32 suggests a deliberate choice. 📉

3. The Maxwell-Epstein Email Chain

House Intel lawyer Dan Goldman returning to New York - POLITICO

The final phase of the hearing focused on direct correspondence between Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, which the DOJ has labeled as "privileged." 🏛️

  • Co-Conspirator Communication: Goldman challenged the legal coherence of this claim, stating that attorney-client privilege cannot apply to emails between two co-conspirators where no legal counsel was present. ⚖️

  • References to Public Officials: The emails reportedly contain statements regarding Donald Trump’s relationship with Epstein. By labeling these as privileged, the DOJ has effectively blocked the unredacted context of these interactions from public view. 🛡️

  • Congressional Record: In a significant move, Goldman successfully entered the 147 pages of unredacted materials into the Congressional Record, potentially making them public unless the DOJ initiates immediate litigation. 📌

Other posts